- CA QUA11830
- Person
- fl. 1931
J.G. Malkin was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.
J.G. Malkin was a student in the School of Mining at Queen's University.
Charles Norton Mallory was born at Escott in Leeds County in 1859. He attended Albert College in Belleville until 1884 when he entered Queen's University at Kingston. He graduated with a degree in Medicine and Surgery from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Kingston, Ontario in 1888. Mallory practiced as a medical doctor in Delta, Ontario from 1889 until his death on February 10th, 1910.
Richard Sankey Malone was born in 1909 in Owen Sound, Ontario, the son of Lieutenant-Colonel Willard Park and Mildred Villiers (Sankey) Malone. He attended the University of Toronto Schools and Ridley College, St. Catharines, Ontario. He was engaged in newspaper work from 1927 to 1978 and was a member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery from 1934 to 1935 He also had a distinguished career in the Second World War. He enlisted in 1939 and was Staff Secretary to the Minister of Defence, 1940. After graduation from the Staff College, he was Staff Captain with 5 Armoured Division and subsequently Brigadier Major in the First Division. In Italy he was Personel Liaison Officer to Field Marshall Montgomery. Later he was Assistant Director of Public Relations, 21st Army Group and in charge of the Canadian Public Relations of the Normandy campaign. He headed the Canadian Mission to General MacArthur's Headquarters. He was among the first to enter Paris, Brussels and Tokyo. He was present at the signing of the Japanese surrender aboard the U.S.S. Missouri on September 1, 1945. In 1946 he was Aide-de-Camp to the Governor-General of Canada in 1946. He was author of "Missing from the Record" (1946);" The Muddle in Defence" (1969), "Organizing for defence: Some comments on the Government White Paper" (1962), "A World in Flames, 1944-1945" (1984) and "A Portrait of War, 1939-1943" (1983).
Arthur Edward Martin Maloney QC (26 November 1919 - 20 September 1984) was a Progressive Conservative party member of the Canadian House of Commons and first Ontario Ombudsman from 1975 to 1979.
Maloney was born in Eganville, Ontario. He became a noted defence lawyer following his 1943 graduation from Osgoode Hall. In 1952 he unsuccessfully defended notorious bank robbers of The Boyd Gang. He was the son of Martin James Maloney, another Member of Parliament.
He was first elected at the Parkdale riding in the 1957 general election and re-elected for a second term in Parliament in the 1958 election. From August 1957 to February 1958 he was Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Labour. He was a principal author of the 1960 Canadian Bill of Rights. Maloney was defeated by Stanley Haidasz of the Liberal party in the 1962 election.
Several years of poor health began in 1979 when Maloney incurred a stroke, ending with a cancer diagnosis. In 1984, Maloney died at his residence in Rockwood, Ontario.